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example, Stonemill Farms in Woodbury is a large residential development project consisting <br />mostly of single-family homes of varying lot sizes (lot widths range from 50 to 105 feet) and a <br />small amount of commercial and townhomes. The following chart shows the varying density <br />calculations for Stonemill Farms. <br /> <br />Table 1 Density calculations for Stonemill Farms, Woodbury <br />Metropolitan Council net density 1 4.2 du/ac 2 for single-family <br />Developer net density (lot size/units)3 2.7 du/ac for single-family <br />Gross density (includes townhomes and private open space; 2.1du/ac overall gross density <br /> <br />3 <br />excludes acreage for commercial, public school, and public park) <br />1 <br /> Provided by the Metropolitan Council <br />2 <br /> Dwelling units per acre (du/ac) <br />3 <br /> Calculated by staff based on developer data <br /> <br />The following chart shows density calculations for the residential development projects included <br />in the self-guided tour. The calculations below are what could be obtained from the cities or <br />consultants involved with some these projects. <br /> <br />Table 2 Densities of Residential Development Projects <br />Project Unit Type Net Density Gross Density <br />Clover Ridge Single Family Range of 0-64 du/ac Overall gross density of 3 du/ac <br />Chaska Townhomes per block <br />Apartments <br />Excelsior/Grand Condominiums <br />43 du/ac <br />St. Louis Park Apartments <br />Wooddale Station Townhomes --- <br />St. Louis Park Apartments Up to 75 du/ac <br />Centennial Lakes Townhomes 10 du/ac <br />Edina Apartments 37 du/ac <br />Cobblestone Lake Single Family --- Up to 4 du/ac <br />Apple Valley Townhomes --- Up to 11/du/ac <br />Senior Housing 27.8 du/ac Overall project density is 10.4 du/ac <br /> <br />Design <br /> <br />reveals nothing about physical form. Two neighborhoods with the exact same density can look as <br />different as night and day. Although they measure out at the same density they are not <br />necessarily perceived to be equally dense. What really matters is how the streets are laid out, <br />how the land is subdivided, how the buildings are arranged and detailed, whether trees are <br />planted, where the sidewalks lead. These are all <br /> Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, <br /> <br />attention paid to design. The following elements are critical: <br /> <br />Diversity in architectural styles and building materials; <br /> <br />Variation in building size, alignment, and the development pattern; <br />26 <br />Page of <br /> <br />